<p>Nearly all of the UC's have sent out admissions, but I have just noticed a mistake that I made. I took a Sac City College course over a summer and for one semester, I erroneously submit an 'A' rather than a 'B'. This is especially disconcerting to me because the UCLA acceptance page clearly states that an acceptance can be revoked as a result of any incongruities in the submitted grades and the official transcript. </p>
<p>This type of error does not fall in the traditional, "I have dropped/changed a class" category. Also, I am still unsure of which college I want to attend. </p>
<p>Should I wait until I chose a college before I report this error to the particular college, or should I address this now to all potential colleges?</p>
<p>Should I make this a custom request, or can I file this under the typical "changes in Application"?</p>
<p>Thanks for the help, this is driving me insane.</p>
<p>Custom request, I doubt they'd rescind you for a single minor incongruity. However, I do not know much about revoked admissions to be honest.</p>
<p>Good luck, just be sincere in your request too.</p>
<p>This is what you do,</p>
<p>1) Go back to the "update applications" website for the University of California and make the correction on their. Even though it is well past the deadline indicated for updates many counselors from the UCs like the change on there for what is presumed to be ease of access and clarity.</p>
<p>2) Send an e-mail out to each and every one of the potential colleges. Be cordial, respectful and very apologetic. You are human and inconsistencies on the account of the applicant is something that just, happens.</p>
<p>Understand though that your mistake can't be compared to someone that forgot to report having a "W" or the like. Your mistake changes the calculation of your GPA. </p>
<p>Thus, in your e-mail you will be professional and polite. You will explain the entire situation and very clearly state what is wrong with your application. You may add that you truly wish to still be considered for admittance but are very sorry for making such a mistake.</p>
<p>3) Call the university admissions department and explaint he situation. Ask what it is you need to do and who to contact. If you need to speak to an admissions counselor they will transfer you. If you just need the e-mail then you already have that taken care of. At that point you just wait until they contact you.</p>
<p>I am going to wish for the best for you Cerberiga. An "A" to "B" is very small compared to an "A" to "C", but even so it is a GPA shifter so be ready just in case alright?</p>
<p>Let me know if you have any other questions.</p>